(15-09-2012 04:08 AM)Logica Humano Wrote: Please, tell me what different types of free will are there?

View it like this:

No Free Will------------------------------------------------------------------------Free Will

Different types would be: 'free will' or anything in the middle, excluding 'no free will', is 'free will', or 'no free will' or anything in the middle, excluding 'free will', is 'no free will'.

And this is where the middle is a combination between circumstances, experiences, your consciousness, and unconscious brain, etc.

(15-09-2012 06:43 PM)Logica Humano Wrote: It is a logical conclusion based on what we currently know in neurology, biology, and physics.

That probably wasn't the best comment to make. The conclusion isn't one based on neurology, biology and physics, especially, and specifically, as it relates to our current understand of those fields.

It's a philosophical question, and at the very least, it would be extremely pretentious to imply (not saying you did it intentionally) that the individuals who questioned the existence of free will, prior to the advancements in those fields, hadn't a clue about the relating, and inherent, limitations. They were doing the philosophy and disagreeing for good reasons.

Anyone who has ever touched something hot or was about to get punched in the face would, hopefully, be able to tell you that it wasn't them, consciously, that made the reactionary decision to lift their hand or move their head.

Free will is obviously limited in many regards, so anyone who would be willing to say that any limitation to conscious decision making, either by external forces and/or unconscious brain functions, would undoubtedly come to no other conclusion than free will being completely non-existent. The thing is, however, that not everyone views free will as being something that is supposed to be completely free. Some people view free will as the ability to control your consciousness and make conscious decisions. This takes into account the fact that your unconscious brain also dictates what you do, how you react to things and even how you think, but views anything that isn't completely deterministic as free will. In that view, given consciousness, one would almost undoubtedly come to the opposite conclusion.

Personally, I'd have to say that free will is about as free as black people in American, or it's about as free as the markets. Depending on where you're coming from.

The Paradox Of Fools And Wise Men:
“The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser men so full of doubts.” ― Bertrand Russell